Chicago Sun-Times

STRONG EURO

Lisa Stansfield digs ‘Deeper’ on new material and U.S. tour

- BY SELENA FRAGASSI | Selena Fragassi is a local freelance writer.

In Chicago the 1980s, under as house the watchful music was eye of exploding in DJs like the late Frankie Knuckles, across the pond Lisa Stansfield was fast becoming a European dance queen with a mix of groovy soul, R&B and Brit pop that would lead to 20 million albums sold and recognitio­n among Billboard’s top 50 most successful dance artists of all time.

“Everybody started playing our B-side in the clubs in London; it was massive on the undergroun­d scene,” she recalls of her first efforts with the pop-leaning, blue-eyed soul group Blue Zone in the mid-‘80s that consisted of Stansfield plus Ian Devaney on guitar, keyboards and trumpet and Andy Morris on trumpet, flugelhorn and more keyboards. The trio eventually fissured by 1988 as they banded together to focus on Stansfield’s solo career, which was a wise choice —before artists like Amy Winehouse and Adele, the British soul pop canon was honed in on Stansfield and her contempora­ry Sade.

Stansfield’s 1989 solo debut “Affection” produced a global hit with the appropriat­ely named single “All Around the World,” and resulted in Grammy nomination­s, duets with the monolithic George Michael and the Band Aid legacy and even a foray into acting and movie soundtrack­s.

While Morris eventually moved on (“he went off the radar, we don’t really know where he is,” says Stansfield when asked about a potential Blue Zone reunion in the future), Stansfield and Devaney continued their partnershi­p, personally and profession­ally. The couple eventually married and Devaney continues to produce Stansfield’s music, including her latest album, “Deeper,” released in April. It’s her eighth studio release, and includes Stansfield’s tenth Top 10 hit on the Billboard Dance Club Songs Chart with the single “Never Ever.” Which could also be the theme of her latest tour in America, something

they after might a that long many never two-decade absence. fans thought ever see again

“Things are going so well over here in Europe, and we’ve had such a massive response to the single over in America so we thought, why not bite the bullet? If we’re going to do it, let’s do it now and see what happens, and I think we’ve got a lot of people on our side,” says Stansfield, who promises a robust set list includzed ing her immortaliz­ed singles like “People Hold On” and “What Did

I Do To You,” among others. “I think it’s not really fair to go on stage and perform just all your new album, it’s very selfish. So for the people that don’t know the new stuff, they’ll still have a good time.”

nothing the Though reverent to scoff her disco throwback on new album is at. In addition to the to her title relationsh­ip with Devrcules,” track “Deeper” (an ode aney), there’s “Hercules," a song that includes a writing credit from horror masteer John Cars penter. “We always wanted to use that bass line from [the score of ] ‘Assault on Precinct 13,’ it’s such a cool line and also a really good

film,” says Stansfield. “So we asked John and he said yes. And it’s just so cool to have a writing credit with him.”

Stansfield’s other career, of course, was acting, starting with an appearance in the 1999 English film “Swing” and then continuing most recently with a role in the 2014 music biopic “Northern Soul,” though she also had a chance to read for Demi Moore’s role in “Indecent Proposal” and was almost cast in “Four Weddings and a Funeral” in the ‘90s.

“I love acting, but I’ve always prioritize­d my music,” Stansfield says, finding a niche in her songs being placed in more than 32 movie soundtrack­s. “I’ve had such great experience­s on screen and would love to do more.”

Stansfield also famously got her start on the small screen on a now-defunct televised talent competitio­n called “Search for a Star,” and while thankful for the opportunit­y, she is no fan of the ongoing obsession with shows like “American Idol” and “The Voice.”

“A lot of those shows now have run their course. Haven’t we had enough of them? I have. I don’t watch them. I really think there could be other things taking up that space,” she says. Stansfield also takes issue with pop stars being seen solely as vessels for other’s songwritin­g, preferring to write and co-write all of her material. On “Deeper,” she says she was inspired by the feeling she used to have going out on Friday nights.

“It’s sort of like when I used to pop my makeup on and would get my record player or cassette machine and put my favorite music on to get ready to go out,” she recalls. “Your makeup was like war paint; you’re a warrior going out into the night and who knows what can happen. In any town, in any country, all across the world. You work all week and then you go out and all your hopes and dreams are on that one night and it can change your life. I feel that songs on this album are like that, and hopefully the tour too, full of hope and positivity for the future.”

 ?? IAN DEVANEY PHOTO ??
IAN DEVANEY PHOTO
 ?? CLEMENS BILAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Lisa Stansfield performs in Berlin in 2014.
CLEMENS BILAN/GETTY IMAGES Lisa Stansfield performs in Berlin in 2014.

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